Occupation Writer Role Writer Language German Spouse Annelies Hinz (m. ?–2013) | Nationality German Movies Trace of Stones Name Erik Neutsch | |
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Died August 20, 2013, Halle, Germany |
zuhaus von erik neutsch lovepoemprojekt2011
Erik Neutsch (born Schönebeck, then in Saxony 21 June 1931; died Halle 20 August 2013) was one of the most successful writers in the German Democratic Republic (Communist East Germany).
Contents
- zuhaus von erik neutsch lovepoemprojekt2011
- Erik Neutsch Rede zur Preisverleihung Literaturwettbewerb 2012
- Early years
- The writer
- Television
- Personal
- Novels shorter stories etc
- Films and screenplays
- Recognition
- References

Erik Neutsch Rede zur Preisverleihung Literaturwettbewerb 2012
Early years
Erik Neutsch came from a working family. After successfully completing his high school career he joined, in 1949, the ruling East German Socialist Unity Party (SED / Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands) as well as the Free German Youth (FDJ / Freie Deutsche Jugend) movement.
The writer
Between 1950 and 1953 he studied Social sciences and Journalism at Leipzig University, graduating with a higher diploma in Journalism. After this he worked till 1960 in Halle, as part of the Culture and Economics editorial team with Die Freiheit, at the time a newspaper of the country's governing SED (party).
After 1960 Neutsch worked both as a journalist and as a writer of books. In 1963 he became a member of the SED regional leadership team and in 1970/71 he spent a year as a volunteer Political commissar with the National People's Army.
Neutsch's output included novels, short stories, children's books, essays, poems and screen-plays. His writings dealt with societal problems in the real-life socialist East Germany, while remaining faithful to the party line. His greatest success came with the 900-page novel "Spur der Steine" ("Trace of stones" 1964). Its central theme is developments in the life of an initially rebellious construction worker who, by the end of the book, has become a well attuned conformist member of the socialist society. Nearly half a million copies of the novel were produced, which involved 35 editions of which five came out after 1990. This made it one of the most successful pieces of East German literature. A (much simplified) film version directed by Frank Beyer appeared in 1966, but it was withdrawn only three days after its first Berlin showing, following criticism from some party officials that its portrayal of The Party was insufficiently positive. It was only shortly before the wall came down in 1989 that "Trace of Stones" returned to East German cinemas.
In the 1970s Neutsch started to write what he intended as his greatest work, the six novel cycle "Peace in The East" ("Der Friede im Osten"), in which the history of East Germany is depicted with suitably epic breadth. In the end Neutsch wrote only five the intended six novels, and the fifth remained incomplete. The author had planned a sixth volume entitled "Years of the Quiet Sun" ("Jahre der ruhigen Sonne"), but after the political changes of 1990 he was no longer able to write it.
Erik Neutsch joined the (East) German Writers' Association in 1960: between 1963 and 1965 he served as Chairman of the Association's Halle branch. He became a full member of the Berlin based Academy of Arts in 1974. After German reunification he became a member of the German Writers' Association (VS / "Verband deutscher Schriftsteller").
Television
Neutsch appeared as himself in the 1966 four part television film Columbus 64 by Ulrich Thein.
Personal
Erik Neutsch was married twice. His first marriage ended, after nearly fifty years, when his wife died. Her final five days were seen as the basis of one of his final pieces of substantive published work, "Verdämmerung" (2003), although much of the text is written in the third person.
He later married Annelies Hinz, with whom he lived, during his final years, in Dölau, a quarter of Halle on its western side.
Novels, shorter stories etc
- Am Fluß. Mitteldeutscher Verlag, Halle 1974.
- Frühling mit Gewalt. Mitteldeutscher Verlag, Halle 1978.
- Wenn Feuer verlöschen. Mitteldeutscher Verlag, Halle 1985.
- Nahe der Grenze. Mitteldeutscher Verlag, Halle 1987, ISBN 3-354-00157-7.
- Plebejers Unzeit oder Spiel zu dritt. Unvollendet Das Neue Berlin, Berlin 2014, ISBN 978-3360021823.